Katy Perry, Arcade Fire, Bob Dylan -- all have released talked-about clips over the last few days, and that's not even getting to the mind-blower that is Kanye West's "Bound 2," in which the rapper pretend-rides a motorcycle with his fiancee, Kim Kardashian, through a digitized version of the American West.

Impressive as they are, though, none of those videos goes on for as long as it takes for the Earth to rotate on its axis.

But as with Dylan's interactive clip for "Like a Rolling Stone," the "Happy" video, viewable online, allows you to click your way into the experience by choosing specific times of day to see the performers do their thing. (Check out the exuberant hippie dude getting busy next to the El Monte Busway at around 2:28 p.m.)

Pop & Hiss will level with you here: We haven't watched the entire not-so-short film, mostly because we keep going back to Kanye and Kim in "Bound 2." And you should know that there's at least one scene in which characters from "Despicable Me" show up, reminding you that -- oh, hey! -- the movie is due next week on iTunes.

For a bit of marketing, though, "Happy" more or less delivers on its title.

Well, it took only 48 years, but Bob Dylan and his camp have finally come up with an official music video for “Like A Rolling Stone.” His breakthrough was a 1965 hit that gave him his first Top 10 single while shattering the rules for what was acceptable on AM Top 40 radio at the time.

At this month's YouTube Music Awards, Arcade Fire presented a so-called live music video for its song "Afterlife" directed by Spike Jonze and starring Greta Gerwig as a woman dealing with the departure of a lover by dancing her face off in the hallway of her apartment building.

On Tuesday the Internet marveled at Kanye West's new music video for his song "Bound 2," in which the rapper rides though a digitized landscape on a motorcycle with his topless fiancée, Kim Kardashian.

Fans who saw the last show of U2’s North American tour Friday at Madison Square Garden in New York City had an incredible bit of luck. For one thing, Bill Clinton was in the house, but blessedly refrained from sitting in on saxophone.

Fans who showed up Wednesday night in New York to see U2 tribute band Unforgettable Fire got more than their money’s worth when members of the real U2 — guitarist the Edge and bassist Adam Clayton — joined the performance.